As of November 24, the day the Joint Plan of Action was announced, Iran was estimated to be less than 6 months away from breakout capability, the point at which it could dash to produce enough weapons-grade uranium for one bomb so quickly that the International Atomic Energy Agency or a Western intelligence service would be unable to detect the dash until it is over.

European Union officials say that they hope negotiations over implementation of the Joint Plan of Action will be concluded in time for the deal to go into effect in late January. A start date of late January will apparently leave Iran’s uranium and plutonium production programs significantly closer to breakout capacity than if the Joint Plan of Action had been implemented on November 24.

At the rates at which Iran was enriching in September and October 2013 (the most recent months covered by the IAEA’s quarterly public reports), Tehran will, by December 24, have created at least an additional 230 kilograms of uranium enriched up to 5 percent and an additional 15 kilograms of uranium enriched to 20 percent. By January 24, Iran will have created at least an aggregate additional 460 kilograms of uranium enriched up to 5 percent and an aggregate additional 30 kilograms of uranium enriched to 20 percent.

It is the implementation of the “Joint Plan of Action” that would entail an Iranian freeze. But as Heinonen and Kittrie, until the plan is implemented Iran will continue its development of it military nuclear program. (Why this doesn’t violate the spirit of the agreement is unclear.)

The six month estimate provided is one of a number of estimates make by the Institute for Science and International Security (ISIS). The observation that by January 24 Iran would have “an aggregate additional 30 kilograms of uranium enriched to 20 percent,” bears some explanation.

According to a graphic in the New York Times – based on ISIS’s research – at the time of the Geneva deal Iran had a stockpile of 196 kilograms of 20% enriched uranium. The terms of the agreement moved the breakout time from less than two months to more than two months. The breakout time is the time it would take Iran to produce enough highly enriched uranium – weapons grade – for a nuclear weapon. (Iran also had less enriched uranium, but that’s not my concern here.)

If two months pass before the agreement is implemented and Iran stops enriching to 20%, then Iran will have 226 kilograms of 20% enriched uranium. According to ISIS’s estimates, given the current centrifuges Iran has, a stockpile of 226 kilograms of 20% enriched uranium, could possibly lower the breakout time to less than a month. (See Table 1, page 8.)

While the goal of the Joint plan of action is to increase Iran’s breakout time, it hasn’t been implemented yet and Iran has been using this time to continue its march to a nuclear weapon.

With Iran reducing its breakout time, surely the administration would note this and warn that this violates the spirit of the Geneva agreement.

A bipartisan group of senators, defying the White House, introduced a bill on Thursday to impose new sanctions on Iran if it failed to conclude a nuclear agreement, or stick to the terms of its interim deal, with the United States and other major powers.

The Obama administration swiftly condemned the legislation, warning that it could derail negotiations with Iran and that President Obama would veto it if it ever came to his desk. With the Senate about to recess for the Christmas holiday, that is unlikely for the time being.

In short the administration says that it doesn’t need help negotiating. State Department spokeswoman, Marie Harf emphasized that point.

The goal here seems to be misdirection. Focus on the Senate and ignore Iran. Unfortunately few in the executive branch or in the media seem curious about what Iran is up to. (Amazingly a majority of Americans are more skeptical of Iran than the President.)

The administration doesn’t want to upset the negotiations, since they’re going so well. But so is the enrichment.

Comments

I don’t mind if America gets hit with Iran nukes. We voted for Obama, we deserve it. I don’t even feel bad for American Jews, who overwhelmingly supported Obama and are asking for it. I feel bad for the Israelis who are struggling to survive in a Muslim part of the world, home to the most anti-Semitic and intolerant people ever.

I thought we should have taken Iran out during the Iranian Hostage Crisis. I was waiting for our boat to deploy and take care of those scumbags but then as we do now have weak leadership in the White House.

Since then thay have used terroists to murder Americans all over the world. That propably includes the barracks bombing in Beruit costing over two hundred Marines their lives.

Our only hope is Israel decides not to wait to get nuked solving that problem for us, but I’m not holding my breath.